Long Read

Djibouti City: Where the Heat is as Intense as the Coffee

@Topiclo Admin3/21/2026blog


so i land in djibouti city, sweating bullets before i even exit the plane. this place is basically a concrete oven wrapped in sun. i just checked and it's... a blast furnace with a side of breathless air, hope you're into that. humidity's low but the heat? it's a physical thing, pressing down like an invisible blanket. feels like 38°C even though the dashboard says 35.93-close enough to melt your flip-flops. locals call it 'the dry heat' but let's be real, it's just heat with better PR.

dusty djibouti streets


wandering around, the city feels like a mosaic of corrugated tin and faded french signs. *djibouti city is chaotic in the best way-honks replacing birdsong, dust devils pirouetting between buildings. stumbled into a tiny cafe near the old port, ordered coffee expecting swill and got this... murky, sweet sludge they call 'kahawa'. apparently it's traditional. looked like dishwater tasted like nostalgia. i tried to explain espresso extraction to the owner. he blinked slowly. cultural differences, i guess.

djibouti port


if you get bored,
tadjoura is just a bumpy bus ride away, and obok pops up if you squint at the horizon. heard the salt flats near obok look like god spilled a giant salt shaker. someone told me the seafood in tadjoura's markets will make you cry, but then again, i also heard that the local fish soup is cooked with so much chili it’ll rewire your taste buds. take it with a grain of salt-literally.


"that cafe? they spike their coffee with cardamom to hide the burnt beans. real connoisseurs go to the place near the stadium, but it’s cash only and the owner’s a mystery." - overheard from a guy selling knock-off sunglasses

djibouti market


found a gem though! tucked behind
le monument de l'independence, a hole-in-the-wall roastery called moka rouge*. the owner, a guy named yusuf, roasts beans over charcoal like it’s 1912. his pour-over was liquid caramel with a hint of bergamot. worth the hunt. he warned me about the 'tourist trap' places near the waterfront. "they sell instant coffee for $5, call it 'djiboutian special'. ripoff artists." spotted a rat the size of a small dog near the harbor dumpsters. city’s got character, i’ll give it that.

check out dive spots on tripadvisor if you’re into underwater madness. or yelp’s top restaurants for questionable-but-delicious eats. the djibouti tourism board lists events, but half the time they’re canceled due to sandstorms. typical.




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About the author: Topiclo Admin

Writing code, prose, and occasionally poetry.

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